Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz

Small cities with less than 200,000 inhabitants do not usually suffer from chronic congestion problems. However, private vehicles are used excessively, making it necessary to implement measures to encourage further use of public transport and pedestrian mobility to make it more sustainable. Bypasses...

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Main Authors: Juan Francisco Coloma, Marta Garcia, Raúl Guzmán
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Transport and Traffic Sciences 2018-09-01
Series:Promet (Zagreb)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://traffic.fpz.hr/index.php/PROMTT/article/view/2748
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spelling doaj-ed6cb1b622ee40e08b8645a862b285952020-11-24T23:46:42ZengUniversity of Zagreb, Faculty of Transport and Traffic SciencesPromet (Zagreb)0353-53201848-40692018-09-0130447948910.7307/ptt.v30i4.27482748Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City BadajozJuan Francisco Coloma0Marta Garcia1Raúl Guzmán2Universidad de ExtremaduraUniversidad de Extremadura (Spain)Universidad de Extremadura (Spain)Small cities with less than 200,000 inhabitants do not usually suffer from chronic congestion problems. However, private vehicles are used excessively, making it necessary to implement measures to encourage further use of public transport and pedestrian mobility to make it more sustainable. Bypasses improve level of service (LOS) by removing cars from the city center, leading to significant reductions in overall travel time. Most studies so far have been conducted in large cities suffering chronic congestion problems, so the aim of this research is to analyze the effects of bypasses in small and non-congested cities through the construction of a traffic model in Badajoz (Spain), starting with the allocation of the origin-destination travel matrix derived from surveys and traffic counts conducted at the southern and eastern accesses. The traffic model describes the mobility in potentially-capturable future southern traffic relationships and allows insights into different alternatives in the construction of a new high LOS road. This research concludes that small cities with no chronic congestion problems should plan bypasses as close as possible to the city, since they are the most economical, produce greater traffic capture, greater time savings, and eliminate the largest number of CO2 emissions from the urban center. The more distant alternatives have a higher LOS, however, these are longer and more expensive solutions that also capture less traffic and thus eliminate less CO2 emissions.https://traffic.fpz.hr/index.php/PROMTT/article/view/2748transport planningtraffic modelorigin-destination matrixBadajoz
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Francisco Coloma
Marta Garcia
Raúl Guzmán
spellingShingle Juan Francisco Coloma
Marta Garcia
Raúl Guzmán
Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
Promet (Zagreb)
transport planning
traffic model
origin-destination matrix
Badajoz
author_facet Juan Francisco Coloma
Marta Garcia
Raúl Guzmán
author_sort Juan Francisco Coloma
title Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
title_short Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
title_full Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
title_fullStr Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Bypass in Small and Non-congested Cities: A Case Study of the City Badajoz
title_sort effects of bypass in small and non-congested cities: a case study of the city badajoz
publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Transport and Traffic Sciences
series Promet (Zagreb)
issn 0353-5320
1848-4069
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Small cities with less than 200,000 inhabitants do not usually suffer from chronic congestion problems. However, private vehicles are used excessively, making it necessary to implement measures to encourage further use of public transport and pedestrian mobility to make it more sustainable. Bypasses improve level of service (LOS) by removing cars from the city center, leading to significant reductions in overall travel time. Most studies so far have been conducted in large cities suffering chronic congestion problems, so the aim of this research is to analyze the effects of bypasses in small and non-congested cities through the construction of a traffic model in Badajoz (Spain), starting with the allocation of the origin-destination travel matrix derived from surveys and traffic counts conducted at the southern and eastern accesses. The traffic model describes the mobility in potentially-capturable future southern traffic relationships and allows insights into different alternatives in the construction of a new high LOS road. This research concludes that small cities with no chronic congestion problems should plan bypasses as close as possible to the city, since they are the most economical, produce greater traffic capture, greater time savings, and eliminate the largest number of CO2 emissions from the urban center. The more distant alternatives have a higher LOS, however, these are longer and more expensive solutions that also capture less traffic and thus eliminate less CO2 emissions.
topic transport planning
traffic model
origin-destination matrix
Badajoz
url https://traffic.fpz.hr/index.php/PROMTT/article/view/2748
work_keys_str_mv AT juanfranciscocoloma effectsofbypassinsmallandnoncongestedcitiesacasestudyofthecitybadajoz
AT martagarcia effectsofbypassinsmallandnoncongestedcitiesacasestudyofthecitybadajoz
AT raulguzman effectsofbypassinsmallandnoncongestedcitiesacasestudyofthecitybadajoz
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